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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 11, 1925)
t1 EDFORD iVJIAIt TRIBUNE The Weatltor PmlU-tloiia I'ulr ami txmler tonight and WnlneMlajr Maximum yesicrday , .l .Minimum today .t... AA.7 Weather Year Ago Maximum Minimum NO. 121 illy Tw.ntli ..kty Fifty w.ntleth YMf. MEDFORD, -QREflOy, TUESDAY, AIWST 11, 102') fourth Y.ar. M -4 i 0 HAD BOOZE SHIP F Congressmen On Trip to Pan ama Canal Drank Up 50 Cases. . Waiter Testifies in Divorce Case of Represen tative Frank D. Scott of Al- ' pena, Michigan. .ALPENA, Mich.. Aug. 11 (A. P.) Fifty boxen of liquor takon uhoiirri the steamer C'rlHtnlml nt Panuma in tho Hprihs of 1 01 1 turned n eongrefi slomil Junket Into a Kay di;lnkine and gambling affair. Klonen Diilltiw. it Filipino, testified ly deposition today at tho divorce hearing of Congress man Frank I. Scott. Da Haw, who was a waiter aboard the Cristobal, said that there was drinking all over the ship. "Kverywhere you could find glassei and liquor," Da 11 aw wild. "When v got to Norfolk we cleaned the shir and found lots of wine bottles ii congressmen's rooms. We found Kometlmes, two. three, four bottles in each room. They all were empty. When the Cristobal docked at Nor- I folk." Dallaw said. "The remaining boxes of liquor were loaded into an army truck and taken away." Dallaw said he. went to tho house office building to ask Mr. Scott to help him to get a Job. "I knock one, two, three, times on door," Dallaw deposed . in broken Knglish, which' was retained in the document. "I wnlt ten, fifteen mln . utes., I tried .to peek ' through the keyhole, hut I could not see anything. "Finally Mr. Scott he open the door; he look very suspicious. He look all mussed up. Most nil time Mr. Scott he keep clothes new and , .pressed, hut ho look 'Verybad when he open the rtonY;' 1 M'1' f ''Miss' Kennedy she enmp out, of another room, she .look disarranged. Her hair was all mussed.' Reading of th,e deposition hail not been completed when . Judge Frank D. Rmerick adjourned the morning session. It wus "quite the usuul thing" to serve liquor in Washington homes and apartments in 1(122 and 193. Mrs; Marguerite A. Hamilton, Identified ns a friend of MrH. Scott's, asserted in another deposition read. The deposi tion was tuken lit San Diego. Calif., where Mrs. Hamilton now resides. Mrs. Hamilton, formerly a neighbor of tho Scotts at the Ward man Park hotel In Washington,' said liquor was served at the Scott apartment and that it was a general practice In of . ficial Washington for hostesses to, In vite their guests to have a drink. Mrs. Hamilton also related that Scott sold the Scotl household furni ture and effects in 1923 to Congress man Royal Johnson of Minnesota. Congressman Scott once remarked that he wondered "if my canary ver steps . A party at Captain Wilbur Sum Aparty nt Captain Wilbur Sum ner's quarters at Fort Myer. Vn.. In honor of a sister of Brigadier Cien eral William Mitchell was related. The affair was'attended by Mrs. Scott and. a score more guests, Mrs. Hamil ton said, and was orderly throughout. Mrs. Scott nt no time was alone with Captain Sumner, the deposition uvc red. , Another party nt the Scott apart ment was described. High balls were served, Mrs. Hamilton said and Con gressman Scott partook along with tho others. . - , Wall Street Report NEW YORK, Aug. 11. Highly con flicting price moements developed in today's aotive stock market. ' The general market developed a reaction ary trend In the early trading when ttclling pressure waB renewed ngnlnst the oils, motors and public utilities, rallied later undor the leadership of the eastern coalers antt southwestern carriers but became snotty again In the closing dealings because of the uneasiness created by the violent fluc tuations In high priced Industrial Issues. Total sales approximated 1,600.000 shnres. I NEW YORK, Aug. 11. (A. P.) Clewiston, Fla., hns been definitely selected as the site for the national monument to the late William Jen Dings Bryan. Announcement to this effect was made today y Miss Dion- essa Bryan Evans, his god daughter. Thn monument will stand in a nlot JUNKET on the southwest shore of Lake Okee- friends, Miss Evans said, and contrihu-1 The loss is estimated nt from $1. chabefl. Florida was the commoner's tions of several thousand dollars 000.000 to tl.GOO.OOO and is covered adnnted state, Miss Evans said, 'already have been received toward the by Insurance, according to officials of adding: Tcost of erection. the Shell company. Wilhelm and Black Both Shoot a Hole In One at Seattle Rudie Wilhelm. Portland, und Willie Black. Helllngham. Wash. each shot u hulo In one of the links of the Rnlnler (.Jo If and country club hero today in the first round of the Pacific norlh fr west amateur-professional ohm. i- piuushlp. L Unprecedented Storm in Dutch Republic Leaves Death and Destruction in Its Path Four Known Dead, Reported Injured. 300 AMSTERDAM. Holland, Aug. 11. (A. P.) Four persons aro reported to have been killed and about lot) in jured in the small village of Borsulo. in eastern Holland near the German border, when it was struck by a ty phoon which lasted several minutes last night. " The village is a mass of ruins. Roth churches were demolished and not a Hlngle house escaped damage. Other villages In tho eastern part of Gelderland province seriously dam aged by last night's storm are Didum, Doetinchem, Oldenzaal and Bengelo. Only few details are available as communication has been interrupted. During the hurricane an airplane crashed on the Catholic asylum at Ruurlo, killing three people. The center of the storm wns at Bor eulor which has. iiv. thousand - Iphab - Hants. A thousand of them. are home less: the rest are living In, tho ruins of their homes. The burgomaster of Borculo, de scribing the damage said he saw the Belgian village of Herre during the war after seven German bombard ments, and the situation at Burcola was much worse. LONDON. Aug. 11. (A. P.) An Amsterdam dispatch to tho Kxehange Telegraph company reporting tho ty phoon at Horculo snys that 300 per sons were injured, such a violent and disastrous storm. It Is ndded. has never visited Holland hefore. ALASKA THIS YEAR " " " - MUSH., AUK. h: - (A. P.) Rigorous conservation 01 the Alaskan fisheries was recom- iyPHOON RAZES 01 AND TOWN SCORES INJURED mended to President Coolidgc today .poundll that new evidence had been hy Representative White of Maine, dlscoverCuV Th new evidence was ranking republican, on nierchnnt ma- eli(,nlf,(1 lo lne governor, who re rlne and fisheries committee. Mr.'fUHed (,. may. jh attorney White, who has Just returned from ,,,-,, .hif.h,.o,i tmltnn had tolil. Alnskn, informed the president that the flshlnit industry (had . suffered considerably during the last year from a lack of fish. Wire Report on , the Pear Market CHICAGO. Aug. 1 1 (A. P.) Seven cars of pears from California, three from Oregon arrived today. Thirty eight cars on track including broken. Twelve enrs sold. California Bartletts 5812 boxes sold nt $1.85 to $2.85; mostly (2.30 to $2.50. NEW YORK, Aug. 11 (A. P.) Forty cars of pears nrrlved from Cali fornia, 9 from New York by boat. Some arrived in mixed cars. California Bartletts In boxes, 62 cars sold, best $2.35 to S3. 15, few $5.25. ordinary .$2.20 to $2.40; poor ripe, $1.75 to $2.15; over ripe, 95c to $1.70, mostly $2.20 to $2.40; average $2.22. IS SELECTED FOR iAL MONUMENT TO "I feel that It Is the place tho memorial should be. Ho was not primarily u politician, but a cru sader, and he believed that there Is a future for Industrial folk In Florida." The site for the monument was do- nated hy one of Mr. Bryan's firmest SLAYER OF PAUL PAYS PENALLY ELECTRIC CHAIR Walter Simmons, Montana Cowboy-' Executed for the Murder of Medford Man's Brother Protests Inno cence to Last. LINCOLN, Noll., AllK. II (A. P.) Walter Kay Simmons, former Mon tunii nowhiiy nml deputy shei-lff, was electrocuted nt the mute prison here today for ihe slaying of Frank Pnht, Spencer, Nebraska, garage man. The current wan sertl into his body at 7:1)5 this morning and turned tiff ut 7:10. Tho doctors pronounced SimmoiiH dead shortly after. Simmons left u Inst letter with his ..iu.,.. a I.'.. .11,. n.it,.,n ,.r I'm,,. pey-a'pnii.-. mom., addressed to iu Ison, Walter Hay Simmons, Jr.. saying 1,0 'v,n f cy used for his son s education. Simmons was up at me regular time and had a breakfast of pineapple, oranges, coffee, bacon, toast, eggs and potatoes. At 0 o'clock the death warrant was rend to the- condemned man by War den Fenton of the prison. A final statement was made by Sim mons to his attorney for publication. It follows: "It Is but a few moments; that there is a hereafter, and thut if I were leaving the world with a lie on my tongue 1 wouldn't have the chance 1 have if I tell the truth, and realizing that as I do and be lieving that to be the truth, the , only, thing I can say is that 1 am innocent. "I am dying without any pre judice against anyone all is for given by me nnd I ask forgiveness in place of It as much as possible,"- . .. . A few minutes before (ho execution the former cowboy called reporters to his cell nnd thanked, them for the "e shown. When asked of a moVwho broke into, the Jail, but "All right. I go without cracking." Simmons , maintained his outward calm to the last and sat with the ut most composure as he was being strapped into the death chatr. In marked contrast to the' long fight of Simmons and his attorneys, for life, the execution physician pro: nounced the slayer dead at 7:10. Simmons requested last night that he bo burled in Omaha. Tho body will be tnken there today ' Simons was hanged for tho murder of Frank Pahl, a Spencer, Nebraska, garage man and brother W. R. Pahl 833 Palm street, this city. Pahl was beaten to denth by an auto crank, with robbery ns the motive, $480 be ing missing from the pockets of the slain man, when found. Simmons was arrested for the deed, and nar rowly escaped lynching at the hands Simmons was hanged for the murder he was spirited away. After the mur jder, Pahl Wuh, buried In a shallow grave to evade, detection. I In the course of the long fight to save Simmons 23 reprieves were iTftmtpil. mid 1 ixi'iinted ' and last Snturduy hi law- ... . . , ,,., , ,, supreme court to save him on the wh,e tl.nvellnR on n train, that he hn(, mrack yM ,ne dliy ,ef,e the murder, "but didn't know whether he had killed him or not." The crime was committer May 15, 1922. The condenmed man maintained throughout that "Jack Currier," an alleged bootlegger, had killed Pahl. No trace of "Currier" was ever found hy the authorities. Last spring, Hlmmons nnd three other murderers, sentenced nnd wait ing trial, made a desperate attempt to escape.' the plot being fraustrated before the quartet reached the outer gate. SHELL OIL FIRE LOSS MAY REACH . A HUGE FIGURE FRESNO, Cal., Aug. 11. Spectators were forced to, flee last night when the flaming 7G0.000 barrel oil reservoir of the Shell Oil company at Oilfields "boiled over" after being struck earlier by a lightning bolt. Hastily con structed ditches failed to halt the ad vance of the seething oil and the home of the superintendent, 100 yards from the reservoir, was destroyed. Small fires ware stnrted by the overflowing oil, but no serious damage has been reported. Every day that the fire lasts 20.000 barrels of oil will be removed by pumping to the tank farm of the com nnny several miles away. Simple Life Is His Creed 1 1 ry :j v r,A If -1 - Great simplicity in clothing, food and manner of life is the. foundation of the tendings of a new cult for which C. J. Armuntt in winning converts in Washing ton, D. C. and vicinity. He is endeavoring to found a "buck to nature" colony at Fairfax, Va. ROCKWOOD, Cai;, Aug. 11. (A. P.) Mud, splinters; und dead chickens were underfoot today as the half thousand Inhabitants of this little Im perial valley town net themselves to the task ol bringing order out of the chaos in the wake of the Sunday tor nado. betweon iifi,owi jitb.uou tovewti ",0. "y""" ." nml cantaloupe shed, damuge to n grocery store that was whlHKed orr Its foundation and planted in the mud 200 yards away; destruction or dam age of a dozen homes and the havoc wrought in corn and cotton fields and among telephone and telegraph lines serving the village. . Due to the destruction of telephone and telegraph communication, It wns not until yesterday that word of Rock wood's plight reached the ontHide world and aid was sent from Drawloy, 131 Centro and other nearby towns. When relief workors arrived they learned that two funnel-shnped clouds had swooped down on Hock wood late Sunday, and that to the terror-stricken residents these two funnels seemed to be racing pell-mell toward a collision in me iniusi or uie town. Tliose who could flung themselves into nearby irrigation ditches, a fnct which is believed to explain the Binall: casualty list ol' five slightly injured Hall and torrential rnln beat upon the survivors as they cringed under the flailing winds of the storm and when they emerged from their improvised storm cellars they found the hall had killed countless chickens while the rnln was turning their streets and out lying roads into bogs of mud. Only two of the town'B approxi mately 20 buildings were standing on their origlnnl foundations. One resi dence reposed In apparent comfort upon the site which a few minutps before belonged to the grocery store. And today breakfasts were cooked by many fumilies on camp fires kindled where their kitchen stoves used to be. RAIN EXPECTED ROSEBUnO. Aug. 11 (A. P.) Fol lowing a night of low temperature nnd high humidify, ull forest fires In Douglas county were reported to he out this morning. Iist night's tem perature wns unUHUtilly low for Au gust, and ivlth high humidity fire fiRhlei-M were able to take advantage of thn condition to extinguish the 10 small fires burning yesterday. KCaK.NI:, Aug. II (A. P.) With smoke cleared nway and skies threat ening rain., there was every Indica tion that the forest fire threats of yes terday had abated hero today. Preparations were being mnde this morning fur flights over the forested nreas of Mnn county by forest air patrol 'illotM stationed here. KCfiE.NK. Aug. 11 (A, P.) Low hanging clouds toduy gave Indication the Inn-continued dry spell here might be broken within the near future. It was much it.oler this morning than hns been the custom within the past two month. Yesterday's maximum temperature was but 1 degree. . CALIF. TORNADO DISASTER GROWS MANY HOMELESS WIN FIRE ON CROWD, FIVE 15 Klansmen Held Under Bail I for Assault With Dangerous, Weapons As Result of Night . . , KI0t Near hramingnam, Massachusetts. fa iuii xerox, munh., ,)uk. u. Sixty of tlin Hovi'nty-flvo men taken Into ruistndy lust iiIkIiI after a Ku Klux Klan meetlitR hail hvvtx broken up l a shooting;, affray in which five men vre wmimletl were released to day. Tho nt her flftene were held In $LMlO hull fm- appearance AllKU.st 111. on ehai'KO of assault with ilaiiKoroiiH wniipnus. Twenty-four of thorn were arm ten od after the others hud been dismissed without hearliiR-. Nine others were dismissed for lark of evidence. One of those held was I'erley V. l.ihhy. upon whose farm the klan meting was held. It was in Llhby's house that the klansmen took shelter when they declared stones were thrown at them by watchers along the road. State troopers rounded up 4Ii men In the I.ihby house. 22 nioro In the barn nnd eight others in the bushes surrounding the buildings. Two of the wounded. Alonzo Holey and Thomas Sllney. both of Haxonvllle, are Ht The Kramlngham hospital. Fo ley, shot through the left temple with buckshot, is In a serious condition. Sllney has two facial wounds. The others shot, were ahle td go homo af ter their wounds were dressed. The riots started last night when a crowd of hostile spectators gathered outside a field on the farm of Parley V. Llbhy, where 100 klansmen Intend. ed to hold their fifth meeting In as many weeks. A few taunts and rocks hurled at tho Klansmen by the out slders were nuswered by six chnrses of buckshot fired from the darkness near a henhouse beside the Lib by house. As the five men foil, Ihe out o plok up lho .oun(1,1(t (in(l C(lVry hem to n nonihv doctor's Office wnet'O thnlr woundH woro drPHHml nnd tho stnto police notlflod. U. S: AVIATORS nAMAT. French Morocco, Aug. 11., (A. P.I The nirii lines of Co one ri,rlnn Swecnnv nf Siinknne. Wash, Lleutenant-Colonul Austen Parker of Helena. Mont., and Captain Arthur Holden of New York, members of the American escndrille who have volun teered for service with the French In Morocco, arrived here this nlornlng. They were received by the colonel commanding the nvlntlon section of the French forces here and civilian authorities. Marshul Lyoutey, commander-in-chief of the French forces in Morocco, will give a dinner fur the American aviators this evening. CASA BliANCA, Morocco, Aug. 11. (A. I'.) One of the forms of torture to which the rebellious Itirflnn tribes men subject their prisoners is burn ing out of the stomach. Consequently the French fliers try always to pro vent being cnplured alive. The casualties among them, how ever, are heavy, for the rtlffinns uro excellent ninrksmon. As the bombing planes frequently drop as low as 60 feet from tho ground to use machine guns against the enemy utter loosing a enrgo of bombs, the Hifflan snipers are given Rood opportunities, which they rarely neg loct. YAKIMA APPLES SOLD, SCOTLAND, AT WASHINGTON, Aug. 11. (A, The sale of a carload of Aniuricun apples in Scotland for four times tile price brought by Portuguese apples and for a higher price than could be obtained for Australian and New Zea land apples was set forth today by the department nf agriculture as a strik ing Illustration of the possihililjHS of snipping American milt abroad I J, MacPheo Ferguson of Yakima. Wash, harvested the apples of Ilia wlnesap variety In 1824. Despite the fact that they wero nearly a year old and were shipped 8000 miles, they arrived) In ScoMund In first-class con- dltlon. They were wrniqied In oil paper at the time of harvest and placed In cold storage at Yukima until 'hipped. , c IN WOUNDED BANQUET Man at Last Is Found Who Never Heard Mary Pickford I.OS ANCEI.EH. Cal Aug. 11 (A. I.) After court attache had walled three weeks for some one to say they had never hoard of Mary Plrkford. Adrian .1. Wood, charged with plotting ti kitlmm the actress. In his own defense, made i rove. lation hero today. trTX: J "XT Mary I'li-kford when I bought that gun," was his surprising answer to n question. Adoption By Millionaire Is An nulled and Bohemian Girl CINDERELLA IS MARY SPAS AMD on is oil! 1 n. . . T-.10 'attention tor an injured ankle otter and Parents Agree tO laKe.he had fled from the celluloso plant laboratory which he had fired to in NO Action DeCISIOn Based clnerato his victim's corpse, is the On Misrepresentation. NEW YORK, Aug. 11 (A. P.) The adoption of Mary Louise Spas hy Ed ward W. Browning, millionaire real estate operator, was annulled today hy Surrogate Noble of Queens county, on tho ground the girl hns misrepresent ed her age. The age Issue was the only one pre sented by District Attorney New eombe, who entered the mutton for revocation. ' Mary was present, ns was ulso her fouler,: iiuuvhw'-'h',-irt-OKiite's decision was announced. The girl showed little emotion Apparently abandoning, her efforts ' throllgh tne ntatement of Bnother per-, to enter a. convent, Mary returned to.0 ,,,, n-i, i,,i -m i.n a ' her home in Astoria, when she left the j cuun nouse. iurnu urowu ot curious i-uiiu wnlted in the little building and crowded the square outside from nn' early hour this morning to witness the final net In tho "Cinderella romance." Mnry and her parents agreed to the annulment, the text t the agreement containing a provision Hint the girl "'," n"1.1" P' 'll1'"te In any right ns ni-ir iu ,na luuuiiu ,i. u w ,,,,k. Her relatives ulso 'bound themselves not to bring suits of nny nature against Mr. Browning or his heirs. Browning later accompanied Mury and her pnrents to the Hotel Belle Claire, where he has a suite. The girl protested against going tn the hotel but finally was persuaded. , At the hotel the party had what Brown ing called "tho farewell dinner." When Browning left the suite he sntd he had "made no cash settlement whatever." The girl then returned to her home with Iter parents. ' LARGER THIS YEAR PORTLAND, Aug. 11 (A. P.) F. L. Kent,' crop statistician of the de partment of agrlculluro, in his month ly report tnilay says thut in spite of some deterioration during ..filly due largely to very hot weather, Oregon's grain crops are still found to be larger than they wero last year. The same is true of hny and po tatoes, but tree fruits and grapes nre either somewhut less than in 1024 or about the sume In prospective yield. The prune crop will be hut a small frnctlon of a full yield. The hop crop is expected to be about the same as In 1024. Seattle to Aid FIre-Flghtars. 8EATTLK, Aug. 11. The Seattle mm HDAIM PROP uiiLuun imniii unui city council yesterday d I rooted the NEW YORK, Aug. 11. A. P.) fire chief lo lend npparatus he could Cleno Tunney, light heavyweight cham spare to communities fighting fires In'plnn. today signed a contract for' a brush and forertts. Tho city was found match with Harry Wills. It will be to have considerable discarded fire- staged at the Yankee stadium, prob flghtlng equipment, Including pump- ably Friday. September 25, under the ing engines. direction of Tex Kickard. rj. y. DOCTOR FLIES TREAT- STILLMAN BOY IN CANADA TIIHKE niVKItS, Quebec, Aug. 11. (A. p.) Dr. David C. Hull, who left Mincoln yesterday hy airplane ror flrnnd Anne. Quebec, In answer to a telegram asking mctflcua aid for! asked Dr. Alexander Hilllnmn, 14-year-nld snn'trln. ' of Jnmes A. Htlllman, arrived safely1 at the Htlllmun lodge. Dr. Hull reached Grand Anna yes- terday after flying approximately HO SEARCH FOR ARSON GANG IN OAKLAND Confederates of Schwartz Are Being Hunted By Police Sensational Developments Predicted Identification of Murdered Man Regarded As Certain Schwartz a Fake. OAKLAND, Cnl Aug. 11. (A. P.) Search for a man und woman believed to have been confederates of Churlea Henry Behwnrta, ut least to the exlent of visiting li'lm between the time he killed 11. W. llniile. ministerial way farer, and Ills suicide when arrest for his crime was Imminent lust Sunday, wus enguglng attention of police to day. That the author of the "too per fect" plot to defraud Insurance com panies of more than $100,000 by cash ing in on the body of a man he had murdered, received food and medical statement or inspector waiiman oi tne Oakland department. ' Waiiman pre dicted that within the next 24 hours there will be startling developments In this case. As the investigation continues the evidence being accumulated tends further and rurther to discredit the statements made by Schwartz In the farewell letter he penned to his wire regarding events leading up to the slaying and the character of the crime. Instead of having slain a total strapger who attacked him, ai , Schwartz wrote Mrs. Schwarti, the police now believe that he had been ucqnulnted with Barbs for four years. The Identification of the victim oh Bnrhe In regarded as virtually certain' tli rough the fllu.lnBtirM nf n'irltna.u. L,in ,,lra(.(11, nKa tn tha nian n, tVxa I " w.,v m. HJ I'lHUV v W I -n-alttllnaa ' nnmnonv' tv' Walnit' nSnali t to Walnut creek to visit his friend. I al. ik,n,r. .irf..n. at ,,j ,,,,. at,,.., ..A nrh k.J Ht, .,,,..., -.h ,h .,,, times - u Q 3noemaKer . tomer service . , , ,t,. , ,,,, Bcaurnrt ,l n'h. l l.l. ,.,, in Wallmt CreBk , mi, Thn .,P,Bhlmi. . anuv..,. , hllvll' , ft chgmM ml tne nentor of a compound for artificial allk making that would ' revolutioniie the Indus try" have suffered aa tha Investiga tion has progressed. ' The formula waa copied verbatim from an old book on chemistry, said Professor E. O. Helnrlch, criminolo gist of the University of California, . und tlie supposed highly Inflammable compound for the cutting of allk fiber was nothing but a harmless paste which! lie stirred Incessantly when visitors were around, Professor Heln rlch snlil. , " . , Instead of being a captain In the French army, Schwarts was a private in the Red Cross service, police state, and the silk skelna which he Is said ! tn Imva flyhlhltnrl aa nma-rnaa mnrla by him when selling stock In Ills com- iany, were purchased at a department store for $8.60. It has developed that one policy rurrieu uy ocnwarT-r, in luvtir Ol mis, Srhwnrtz for $25,000 had a one year sulcldo clause which expired August 2, If it proves that this policy la payable it nroliably will he the only one of half a dozen which totaled more than $100,000 that will accrue to the wire of the mnn who committed murder and arson to beat the insurance game and, when he saw he had bungled, killed himself. . ETUNNE1 TO MEET WILLS BY AIRPLANE TO' miles. He nrrlved nt the lodge a few hours nffer receiving the ' tetogrnm asking for medical aid. Thn hnv wai nt tha InHa-a with tile . ., ,. who Bull to make the airplane Itppdrls received hire said that the boy suffered a fractured leg, hut details of their mishap was not given, out.